
The Invisible Army - Part 15: 8,000 Miles to War
The Invisible Army ← Series Home Key Takeaways Distance defines everything: 8,000 miles from home, with no bases en route except Ascension Island (3,400 miles out), Britain had to bring everything or do without. Improvisation was survival: Ships were loaded by hand in days, not weeks. Stores were "cross-decked" at sea. Civilian vessels became warships. Nothing went according to peacetime plans. Time compressed decisions: Winter was coming. Every day of preparation was a day closer to impossible conditions. Speed trumped optimization. Just enough was enough: Britain didn't have comfortable margins. They had barely sufficient supplies to win—and knew that any major loss could be fatal. The Shock of War On April 2, 1982, Argentine forces invaded the Falkland Islands—a British territory 8,000 miles from London, home to 1,800 people and several hundred thousand sheep. ...
